TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to an elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric having
a smooth touch to skin and also to a process for making the same.
RELATED ART
[0002] Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 1994-184897 discloses an elastically
stretchable web formed by laminating a fibrous layer of elastically stretchable polymer
with a fibrous layer of inelastic stretchable polymer.
[0003] Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 1997-512313 also discloses an elastically
stretchable web formed by laminating the fibrous layer of elastically stretchable
polymer with the fibrous layer of inelastic stretchable polymer.
[0004] Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 1992-11021 discloses an elastically stretchable
conjugated thread comprising a core-sheath-type conjugated fiber of which the core
fiber is made of elastically stretchable urethane and the sheath fiber is made of
inelastic stretchable polyamide.
[0005] Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 1997-316748 discloses an elastically
stretchable fabric including a core-sheath-type conjugated filament as a weft. In
this fabric, the elastomeric core and the non-elastomeric sheath of the filament are
separated from each other and the sheath slackens to form bellows-like wrinkles as
the filament is drawn.
[0006] Japanese Patent Publication No. 3262803 discloses an invention relating to multi-component
thermoplastic continuous filaments obtained by melt spinning, a product formed of
such filaments and a process for forming such a product. According to the disclosure
of the above-cited Publication, multi-component thermoplastic filaments extruded from
the extruder is introduced through a quenching chamber into a Lurgi-duct within which
the filaments are drawn and split under the effect of compressed air supplied thereinto.
The filaments split in this manner are accumulated on a collecting surface formed
by perforated screen or the like.
[0007] Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 1997-291454 discloses an invention relating
to an elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric. According to the disclosure of the
above-cited Publication, the elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric is formed using
elastically stretchable conjugated fibers consisting of a hard elastic member comprising
crystalline polypropylene as a first component and a thermoplastic elastomer as a
second component. The conjugated fibers may be selected from a group including those
of various types such as side-by-side and sheath-and-core. Such conjugated fibers
can be finished into nonwoven fabric by various processes such as spun bonding and
thermal bonding processes.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
[0008] In the web and the nonwoven fabric disclosed in the above-cited Publication Nos.
1994-184897 and 1997-512313, respectively, the fibrous layer made of elastically stretchable
polymer is exposed on the surface of the fabric. The fibers made of such polymer exhibit
a relatively high friction coefficient and correspondingly rough touch. The elastically
stretchable web or non-woven fabric formed by laminating the fibrous layers tend to
be a thick one.
[0009] The conjugated thread and the fabric disclosed in the above-cited Publication Nos.
1992-11021 and 1997-316748, use the core-sheath type conjugated fiber of which the
core is formed by elastomeric fiber and the sheath is formed by non-elastomeric fiber.
The sheath functions to cover the elastically stretchable polymer, i.e., the elastomeric
fiber and thereby to prevent the elastomeric fiber from coming in direct contact with
the user's body. In this way, the conjugated thread as well as the fabric disclosed
in the above-cited Publications are able to offer a smooth touch to the skin and a
comfortable touch for the user's body. However, the sheath fiber presenting bellows-like
wrinkles obstructs the core fiber from elastically contracting and, in consequence,
limits an extension coefficient as well as a contraction coefficient of the conjugated
thread and the fabric. The conjugated fiber has its sheath formed with the bellows-like
wrinkles and therefore it is difficult for these conjugated thread and fabric to offer
the soft and flexible touch peculiar to the fiber having a small fineness.
[0010] According to the above-cited Publication No. 3262803, the multi-component thermoplastic
filaments are split to a plurality of more fine filaments within the Lurgi duct and
then formed into a nonwoven fabric. Repective components constituting the multi-component
thermoplastic filament appear on the surface of this nonwoven fabric in a form of
more fine filaments in accordance with the mixing proportion of these components.
If one of the components is a thermoplastic elastomer, the filament of such a thermoplastic
elastomer will be exposed on the surface of the nonwoven fabric and a wearer of a
wearable article made of the nonwoven fabric may experience a rough touch with poor
slip properties of the nonwoven fabric depending on a proportion of the thermoplastic
elastomer filament.
[0011] According to the above Publication No. 1997-291454, the elastically stretchable conjugated
fiber consisting of the hard elastic member comprising polypropylene as the first
component and the thermoplastic elastomer as the second component are intermittently
welded into an elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric. The circumferential surface
of the conjugated fiber is defined by zones occupied by polypropylene and zones occupied
by the elastomer. In this case the thermoplastic elastomer is inevitably exposed on
the surface of the nonwoven fabric. Consequently, this nonwoven fabric may have a
rough touch and poor slip properties. The above Publication No. 1997-291454 describes
as one of embodiments a sheath-and-core type conjugated fiber of which the sheath
is formed by polypropylene as the first component and the core is formed by the elastomer
comprising ethylene-α-olefin copolymer as the second component. The elastic stretchability
of such a conjugated fiber is governed by the stretchability of the hard elastic member
comprising polypropylene and the stretchability of the elastomer might be thereby
suppressed.
[0012] It is an object of the present invention to provide a novel elastic nonwoven fabric
adapted to have a broad elastic extension range as well as a broad elastic contraction
range and to offer a smooth touch to the skin.
[0013] The present invention has a first aspect relating to a nonwoven fabric and a second
aspect relating to a process for making the nonwoven fabric.
[0014] According to the first aspect of the invention, there is provided an elastically
stretchable nonwoven fabric comprising elastically stretchable first fibers made of
a first polymer and inelastically stretchable second fibers made of a second polymer.
[0015] The improvement according to the first aspect of the invention is characterized in
that the nonwoven fabric has first and second surfaces as viewed in its thickness
direction, the first and second surfaces extending in parallel to each other, the
second fiber is attached to the first fiber at attaching areas formed intermittently
along the first fiber and spaced apart from the first fiber between each pair of the
neighboring attaching areas, each segment of the second fiber spaced apart from the
first fiber between each pair of the neighboring attaching areas being longer than
an associated segment of the first fiber, and the number of the second fiber is in
a range of 1 to 16 per each first fiber.
[0016] The first aspect of the invention can be implemented in preferable manners as follows:
(1) the first and second fibers intersect with each other in such a manners that the
first fiber lies inside and the second fiber lies outside in any one of the first
and second surfaces;
(2) the first fiber has on its circumferential surface first curved surfaces each
bulging radially outward from an axis of the first fiber and second curved surfaces
each depressed radially toward the axis of the first fiber, the first and second curved
surfaces alternately appearing in a circumferential direction of the first fiber,
and each pair of the first curved surfaces neighboring to each other in the circumferential
direction cooperate with the second curved surface lying between the pair of the first
curved surfaces neighboring to each other to form a groove extending in a longitudinal
direction of the first fiber so that the second curved surface defines a bottom of
the groove. In the case that the nonwoven fabric having such a first fiber is used
for a wearable article, these are little chances where the first fiber contacts the
skin of a wearer of the article, because the curved surfaces of the first fiber cannot
contact the skin.
(3) one of the first and second surfaces has a slip angle of 25° to 40°. The nonwoven
fabric having the slip angle of such a range is suitable for a wearable article and
other products.
(4) the first polymer is selected from the group consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane
and thermoplastic polyurethane containing a lubricant and the second polymer is selected
from the group consisting of polyolefin-based polymer and polyamide-based polymer.
[0017] The object set forth above is achieved, according to the second aspect of the invention,
by an improvement in a process for making an elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric
formed by elastically stretchable first fibers made of a first polymer and inelastically
stretchable second fibers made of a second polymer.
[0018] The improvement according to the second aspect of the invention is characterized
by that feeding, in a machine direction, a plurality of conjugated fibers each consisting
of a first fibrous component made of the first polymer and a second fibrous component
extending in parallel to and releasably attached to a surface of the first fibrous
component and thereby forming a web from the conjugated fibers having a basis weight
in a range of 10 to 500g/m
2, forming the web with a plurality of attaching areas intermittently formed in at
least one direction of the machine direction and a cross direction intersecting orthogonally
the machine direction so that the conjugated fibers can not be separated one from
another at the attaching areas, stretching the web at least in the one direction within
an elastic range of the first fibrous component and under a failure point of the second
fibrous component and thereby separating the first and second fibrous components one
from another between each pair of the attaching areas neighboring to each other and
permanently deforming the second fibrous component; and allowing the web to contract
under an elastic recovery force of the first fibrous component so that the first fiber
may be obtained from the first fibrous component, the second fiber may be obtained
from the second fibrous component and the nonwoven fabric may be obtained from the
web.
[0019] The second aspect of the invention can be implemented in preferable manners as follow:
(1) the first fibrous component of the conjugated fiber has on its circumferential
surface first curved surfaces each bulging radially outward from an axis of the first
fibrous component and second curved surfaces each depressed radially toward an axis
of the first fibrous component, the first and second curved surfaces alternately appearing
in the circumferential direction of the first fibrous component, and each pair of
the first curved surfaces neighboring to each other in the circumferential direction
cooperate with the second curved surface lying between the pair of the first curved
surfaces neighboring to each other to form a groove extending in the longitudinal
direction of the first fibrous component so that the second fibrous component extends
in parallel to the first fibrous component in the groove.
(2) the circumferential length of the conjugated fiber occupied by the second fibrous
component is in a range of 40 to 90% of the whole circumferential length of the conjugated
fiber.
(3) the number of the second fibrous component constituting the conjugated fiber is
in a range of 1 to 16 per one of the first fibrous component.
(4) the first polymer is selected from the group consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane
and thermoplastic polyurethane containing a lubricant and the second polymer is selected
from the group consisting of polyolefin-based polymer and polyamide-based polymer.
[0020] In the present invention the slip angle is measured in an apparatus depicted by an
accompanying drawing, i.e. Fig. 11. The measuring method of the slip angle is included
in the explanation of Fig. 11.
[0021] The nonwoven fabric according to the present invention, even when the nonwoven fabric
contains the elastic fiber, allows the smooth touch of the nonwoven fabric to the
article wearer' s skin to be adjusted by placing in the vicinity of each of the elastic
fiber at least one inelastic fiber which is longer than the elastic fiber. The smooth
touch to the article wearer's skin can be effectively adjusted by placing a plurality
of the inelastic fibers in the vicinity of the elastic fiber so as to surround this
elastic fiber. Since the segment of the inelastic fiber defined between a pair of
the neighboring attaching areas in which the inelastic fiber is inseparably attached
to the elastic fiber is longer than the associated segment of the elastic fiber, the
elastic stretchability of the elastic fibers as well as the nonwoven fabric is not
disturbed by the inelastic fiber.
[0022] The process according to the present invention for making the nonwoven fabric is
primarily characterized in that the conjugated fibers consisting of the elastic fibrous
component and the inelastic fibrous component separably attached to the surface of
the elastic fibrous component are split into the respective fibrous components so
that the inelastic fibers having a smaller fineness may surround the elastic fiber
having a larger fineness. In this way, the process according to the present invention
can provide thin nonwoven fabric which is elastically stretchable and contractible
and allows also at least one of the upper and lower surfaces of the nonwoven fabric
to present a smooth touch and high slip properties of the inelastic fiber having a
smaller fineness instead of those of the elastic fiber having a larger fineness.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023]
Fig. 1 is a perspective view showing a typical embodiment of a nonwoven fabric;
Fig. 2 is a photograph showing cross-sections of conjugated fibers;
Fig. 3 is a diagram tracing the conjugated fibers in photograph of Fig. 2;
Fig. 4 is a scale-enlarged plan view showing a part of Fig. 1;
Fig. 5 is a sectional view taken along a line V-V in Fig. 4;
Fig. 6 is a scale-enlarged portion of Fig. 5;
Fig. 7 is a view similar to Fig. 5 illustrating a relative position of the respective
fibers when the nonwoven fabric is stretched;
Fig. 8 is a photograph similar to Fig. 2 showing a preferred embodiment of the present
invention;
Fig. 9 is a diagram similar to Fig. 3 showing the preferred embodiment;
Figs. 10A, 10B and 10C are sectional views of the conjugated fibers; and
Fig. 11 is a side view of a tester.
DESCRIPTION OF THE BEST MODE FOR WORKING OF THE INVENTION
[0024] Details of the nonwoven fabric and the process for making the same according to the
present invention will be more fully understood from the description given hereunder
with reference to the accompanying drawings.
[0025] A substantially hexahedral fragment of nonwoven fabric 1 shown in Fig. 1 in a perspective
view has upper and lower surfaces 2, 3 which extend parallel to each other and define
the thickness of the nonwoven fabric 1 and side surfaces defined by cut surfaces 4a,
4b, 4c, 4d each intersecting the upper and lower surfaces 2, 3. The nonwoven fabric
1 comprises elastically stretchable fibers 11 made of a first thermoplastic polymer,
inelastically stretchable fibers 12 made of a second thermoplastic polymer and conjugated
fiber regions 13 formed by the elastic fibers 11 and the inelastic fibers 12 which
are joined together side by side. In the nonwoven fabric 1, these fibers 11, 12 and
the conjugated fiber regions 13 are welded, adhesively bonded or mechanically intertwined
together at a plurality of attaching area 16 so that these fibers 11, 12 and the conjugated
fiber regions 13 may be substantially fixed in the area 16. The elastic fibers 11
and the inelastic fibers 12 are obtained by splitting each conjugated fiber 13a corresponding
to each of the conjugated fiber regions 13 into a fiber component 21 and a fiber component
22 (see Fig. 2) during a production process as will be described later. As will be
seen in Fig. 1, the conjugated fiber regions 13 principally lie in the vicinity of
the respective attaching area 16.
[0026] In the nonwoven fabric 1, the elastic fibers 11 have a fineness in a range of 0.1
dtx to 10 dtx and the inelastic fibers 12 have a fineness in a range of 0.05 dtx to
2 dtx. The fineness of the inelastic fiber 12 is preferably smaller than the fineness
of the elastic fiber 11. Except for the area 16, in the surrounding area of each of
the elastic fibers 11, one to sixteen of the inelastic fibers 12 extends or extend
between the neighboring areas 16, for example, the area 16a and the area 16b depicted
in Fig. 1. In a preferred embodiment of the nonwoven fabric 1, at least three inelastic
fibers 12a, 12b, 12c lie in the surrounding area of the individual elastic fiber 11a
(see Fig. 5) and wrap around this elastic fiber 11a. In the vicinity of the areas
16a and 16b, the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c are branched and spaced apart from
the elastic fiber 11a. Thus the elastic fiber 11 and the inelastic fibers 12 are repeatedly
joined together (at the areas 16) and spaced apart from each other in a longitudinal
direction of the elastic fiber 11. Between the neighboring areas 16a and 16b, each
segment of the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c is longer than the segment of the elastic
fiber 11a, and the elastic fiber 11a is substantially rectilinear and the inelastic
fibers 12a, 12b, 12c describe various curves, respectively. On the upper surface 2
the ratio of the number of the elastic fiber 11a to the number of the inelastic fibers
12a, 12b, 12c is approximately 1:3. The elastic fiber 11a and the inelastic fibers
12a, 12b, 12c have ends thereof exposed on the cut surface 4a and the number of these
ends approximately corresponds to the number of the elastic fibers 11a and the inelastic
fibers 12a, 12b, 12c. In other words, a ratio of the ends of the elastic fibers 11a
to the ends of the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c exposed on the cut surface 4a is
approximately 1:3.
[0027] Uses of the nonwoven fabric 1 are not specified. The nonwoven fabric 1 can be used
for a wearable article, for example, a disposable diaper, disposable pants or a disposable
medical gown, and household goods, for example, disposable wipes. In the nonwoven
fabric 1 used in these fields it is preferable that a straight distance between the
neighboring attaching areas 16a and 16b on the elastic fiber 11a is 0.5 - 10 mm, and
that the lengths of the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c between the neighboring attaching
areas 16a and 16b are 1.2 - 5 times of the length of the associated elastic fiber
11a.
[0028] The elastic fibers 11 are elastically stretched when the nonwoven fabric 1 of the
arrangement as has been described above is held with the hands and pulled in a direction
A or in a direction B intersecting orthogonally the direction A, whereupon the inelastic
fibers 12 are oriented to extend in the direction A or in the direction B. Upon releasing
from the pulled condition, an elastic recovery force of the elastic fibers 11 causes
the nonwoven fabric 1 to shrink to the state of Fig. 1. It is well known that such
an elastic material as the elastic fiber 11 has a rubbery rough touch, but the presence
of the plural inelastic fibers 12 wrapping around the respective elastic fibers 11
is effective to provide the upper and lower surfaces 2, 3 of the nonwoven fabric 1
with a smooth and slipping touch similar to that of the inelastic fiber 12. In addition,
the smooth and slipping touch of the nonwoven fabric 1 of the present invention can
be controlled by a fineness, a shape of the cross section and a number of the inelastic
fiber 12. The fineness of the inelastic fibers 12 may be minimized, for example, in
the order of 0.5 dtx to 1.5 dtx to make the touch of the upper and lower surfaces
2, 3 more smooth and flexible.
[0029] Fig. 2 is a photograph showing cross-sections of conjugated fibers 13a used to make
the nonwoven fabric 1 and Fig. 3 is a diagram tracing the conjugated fibers 13a in
the photograph of Fig. 2. A plurality of the conjugated fibers 13a appearing in Fig.
2 are substantially identical one to another. Each of these fibers 13a has a diameter
of 25 µm to 30 µm and comprises a single elastic fiber component 21 and three inelastic
fiber components 22 separably attaching to the surface of the elastic fiber component
21 substantially at regular intervals in a circumferential direction. The conjugated
fiber 13a is substantially identical to the conjugated fiber component 13 depicted
in Fig. 1 in construction as well as in composition. The conjugated fiber 13a can
be obtained by extruding simultaneously an elastic thermoplastic polymer to form the
elastic fiber component 21 and an inelastic thermoplastic polymer to form the inelastic
fiber component 22 through nozzles of an extruder for melt spinning well known in
the art. The elastic fibrous component 21 has on its circumferential surface first
curved surface portions 51 each bulging radially outward from an axis of the elastic
fibrous component 21 and second surface portions 52 each depressed radially toward
the axis of the elastic first fibrous component 21 so that these first and second
surface portions 51, 52 alternately appearing in the circumferential direction of
the elastic fibrous component 21. Each pair of first surface portions 51, 51 neighboring
to each other in the circumferential direction cooperate with the second surface portion
52 lying between the pair of neighboring first surface portions 51 to form a groove
53 wherein the second surface portion 51 defines a bottom of the groove 53 and a total
of three grooves 53a, 53b, 53c extend in the longitudinal direction of the elastic
fibrous component 21. The inelastic fibrous component 22 comprises three inelastic
fibrous components 22a, 22b, 22c extending in the longitudinal direction of the elastic
fibrous component 21 in the grooves 53a, 53b, 53c, respectively.
[0030] The first polymer to be used to obtain the elastic fiber component 21 includes a
thermoplastic polyurethane, a thermoplastic polyurethane containing lubricant and
any other thermoplastic elastomers. The second polymer to be used to obtain the inelastic
fiber component 22 includes thermoplastic polymer which is incompatible with the first
polymer and stretches inelastically. The term "incompatible" used herein means that
a conjugation strength of the inelastic fiber component 22 to the elastic fiber component
21 is relatively low and the inelastic fiber component 22 can be easily separated
or split from the elastic fiber component 21, when the conjugated fiber 13a is stretched.
The second polymer having such properties may be selected from the group including
polyolefine polymer such as polyethylene or polypropylene and polyamide polymer such
as nylon. Either homopolymer or copolymer of polypropylene can be used. The inelastic
fiber 12 of polypropylene has preferably crystallinity less than 30 % and, more preferably,
less than 20 % and does not include a fiber to be deemed as a hard elastic fiber.
The crystallinity of the inelastic fiber 12 is measured by a DSC method in the present
invention. The first elastic fiber component 21 may be made by thermoplastic polyurethane
containing a lubricant such as fatty amide to facilitate the inelastic fiber component
22 to be separated easily from the elastic fiber component 21. An example of the elastic
fibrous component 21 is a thermoplastic polyurethane whose melt viscosity based on
JIS K 7311 is 23 x 10
3 - 180 x 10
3 poise. An example of the inelastic fiber component 22 is a polypropylene whose Melt
Flow Rate (MFR) is 30 at 230°C and 2.16 kg/cm
2. A preferable weight ratio of the elastic fibrous component 21 to the inelastic fibrous
component 22 is 20:80 - 90:10. In a preferable case of the conjugated fiber 13a, the
inelastic fibrous components 22 associated with each elastic fibrous component 21
have a circumferential length occupying 40 % to 90 % of the whole circumferential
length of the composite fiber 13a. The areas and shapes of the elastic fibrous component
21 and the inelastic fibrous component 22 in the cross-section of the conjugated fiber
13a are formed in such a way that the elastic fiber 11 from the elastic fibrous component
21 may have a fineness of 0.1 - 10 dtx and the inelastic fiber 12 from the inelastic
fibrous component 22 may have a fineness of 0.05 - 2 dtx and less than that of the
elastic fiber 11. A preferable inelastic fibrous component 22 may have a flat cross-section
such as an oval shape and the inelastic fiber 12 derived from the inelastic fibrous
component 22 may have also a flat corss-section. If the inelastic fiber 12 has a flat
cross-section, the length of the long axis may be longer than two times of the length
of the short axis so that the inelastic fiber 12 can be easily bent.
[0031] Using such a conjugated fiber 13a, the nonwoven fabric 1 of Fig. 1 is formed in a
manner as will be described. Preferably, the conjugated fiber 13a of continuous type
is used. A plurality of conjugated fibers 13a is supplied in a machine direction to
make a web having a basis weight of 10 g/m
2 to 500 g/m
2. In the course of making such a web, the attaching areas 16 depicted in Fig. 1 in
which the conjugated fibers 13a are joined or intertwined together in an inseparable
manner may be formed intermittently in one of the machine direction and the cross
direction intersecting orthogonally the machine direction by an appropriate treatment,
for example, by embossing the web under heating or by jetting high pressure columnar
water to the web or by blowing a heated air to the web. This web may be stretched
within an elastic range of the elastic fibrous component 21 and under a failure point
of the inelastic fibrous component 22, for example, by 70 % or more in one direction
or in two directions along which the attaching areas 16 are formed intermittently.
Thereafter, the web is relieved from the stretched condition and is contracted by
the elastic recovery force of the elastic fiber component 21 to obtain the nonwoven
fabric 1 depicted in Fig. 1. Between each pair of the neighboring attaching areas
16, 16, for example, the areas 16a and 16b in Fig. 1, the conjugated fiber 13a is
separated or split along the interfaces of the elastic fiber component 21 and the
inelastic fiber components 22 into one elastic fiber 11 and three inelastic fiber
components 12. At the same time, the inelastic fibers 12 also elongate so as to be
permanently deformed and a diameter of each inelastic fiber 12 is reduced. In the
nonwoven fabric 1 obtained by contracting the web, between each pair of the neighboring
areas 16, 16, the elastic fibers 11 contract so as to describe a substantially straight
line or a gentle curve while each of the inelastic fibers 12 longer than the elastic
fiber 11 describes a curve which is more complicated than the elastic fibers 11 and
intersect the elastic fibers 11 and the inelastic fibers 12.
[0032] Fig. 4 is a scale-enlarged plan view showing the elastic fibers 11a representing
the elastic fiber 11 and the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c representing the inelastic
fiber 12 on the upper surface 2 of the nonwoven fabric 1 of Fig. 1 obtained in the
manner as has been described above, and Fig. 5 is a sectional view taken along a line
V-V in Fig. 4. In the vicinity of the areas 16a, 16b, as will be apparent from Fig.
4, the elastic fiber component 21 and the inelastic fiber components 22 of the conjugated
fiber 13a are not separated, and therefore, the conjugated fiber 13a forms the conjugated
fiber regions 13. Between each pair of the neighboring areas 16a, 16b on the elastic
fiber 11a separated from the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c, the elastic fiber 11a
describes a substantially straight line while the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c describe
various curves. The inelastic fiber 12b are intersecting the elastic fiber 11a so
as to provide crossing points. At the crossing points the elastic fiber 11a lies inside
and the inelastic fiber 12b lies outside in the thickness direction of the nonwoven
fabric 1. On the cut surface shown in Fig. 5, the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c are
distributed around the elastic fiber 11a so as to surround the elastic fiber 11a.
[0033] Fig. 6 is a scale-enlarged perspective view of the elastic fiber 11a of Fig. 5. The
circumferential surface of the elastic fiber 11a is defined by first curved surface
portions 61 each radially bulging outward from an axis of the elastic fiber 11a with
a relatively small curvature radius and second curved surface portions 62 each radially
depressed toward the axis of the elastic fiber 11a so that these first and second
curved surface portions 61, 62 alternately appear on the circumferential surface of
the elastic fiber 11a. The second curved surface portion 62 lies between each pair
of the first curved surface portions 61 neighboring to each other in the circumferential
direction and these first and second curved surface portions 61, 62 cooperate together
to form a groove 63 extending in the longitudinal direction of the elastic fiber 11a.
These first curved surface portion 61, second curved surface portion 62 and groove
63 respectively correspond to the first surface portion 51, the second surface portion
52 and the groove 53 of the conjugated fiber 13a depicted by Fig. 3.
[0034] With a wearable article made of the nonwoven fabric 1 including the elastic fiber
11 and the inelastic fiber 12 depicted in Figs. 4, 5 and 6, the article wearer's skin
readily comes in contact with the inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c rather than with
the elastic fiber 11a. Consequently, a touch and slip properties of the nonwoven fabric
1 are similar to those of the inelastic fiber 12. This is very true, when the number
of the inelastic fibers 12 intersecting the elastic fiber 11a is relatively large
as in the case depicted in Fig. 4 and the elastic fiber 11a having a rough touch and
poor slip properties to the article wearer's skin is embedded among the inelastic
fibers 12 on the upper surface 2 of the nonwoven fabric 1. As will be apparent from
Fig. 6, the elastic fiber 11a comes in contact with the article wearer's skin 69 indicated
by imaginary lines merely in the vicinity of the first curved surface portions 61
but the second curved surface portions 62 rarely comes in contact with the skin 69.
In this way, the circumferential surface of the elastic fiber 11a possibly coming
in contact with the skin 69 is limited to an extremely small area having a small curvature
radius. Compared to an elastic fiber having a circular cross-section of the same area
as that of the elastic fiber 11a, the surface area of the elastic fiber 11a coming
in contact with the skin 69 is substantially reduced. The smaller the surface area
of the elastic fiber 11a possibly coming in contact with the skin 69 is, the higher
the smooth touch and slip properties of the nonwoven fabric 1 to the article wearer'
s skin 69 are. Even if the elastic fiber 11a comes in contact with the skin 69, a
gap is left in many cases between the skin 69 and the grooves 63 of the elastic fiber
11a and such a gap serves to relieve the skin 69 from a high humid condition since
the gap allows a vapour generated within the article to escape outward. The nonwoven
fabric 1 according to the invention can be implemented also in a manner that not the
upper surface 2 but the lower surface 3 is constructed as depicted in Fig. 1 or the
both surfaces 2, 3 are constructed as depicted in Fig. 1.
[0035] Fig. 7 is a view similar to Fig. 5 showing the nonwoven fabric 1 being pulled in
the direction A indicated in Fig. 4. The inelastic fibers 12a, 12b, 12c of Fig. 5
move in directions indicated by arrows P, Q, R and get nearer to the elastic fiber
11a as the elastic fiber 11a is stretched in the direction A so that these inelastic
fibers 12a, 12b, 12c may closely surround the elastic fiber 11a as shown in Fig. 7.
If most of the inelastic fibers 12 of Fig. 7, orientate in the direction A, the touch
and slip properties of the nonwoven fabric 1 may be further similar to the smooth
touch and high slip properties of the inelastic fibers 11.
[0036] Figs. 8 and 9 are views similar to Figs. 2 and 3, exemplarily showing the conjugated
fiber 13a suitably used in the present invention. This conjugated fiber 13a has a
diameter of about 15µ and consists of the elastic fibrous component 21 presenting
a semicircular cross-section and the inelastic fibrous component 22 presenting a semicircular
cross-section which are separably attached together. The conjugated fiber 13a thus
presents a substantially circular cross-section and the inelastic fibrous component
22 appearing on a circumferential surface of this conjugated fiber 13a occupies approximately
50% of the circumferential length of the conjugated fiber 13a. Also in the nonwoven
fabric 1 obtained from the web comprising these conjugated fibers 13a by stretching
the web and then allowing the web to contract, a length of the inelastic fiber derived
from the inelastic fibrous component 22 is longer than the elastic fiber derived from
the elastic fibrous component 21. With such inelastic fibers flexing and/or curving
so as to intersect the elastic fibers, the inelastic fibers function to prevent the
elastic fibers from coming in direct contact with the article wearer's skin. Consequently,
the nonwoven fabric obtained from these conjugated fibers 13a exhibits a smooth touch
and high slip properties to the article wearer's skin although a level of its slip
properties can not be comparative to those exhibited by the nonwoven fabric 1 depicted
in Fig. 1.
[0037] Since the nonwoven fabric 1 of the invention may be formed using the web of the conjugated
fiber 13a comprising the elastic fibrous component 21 having the groove 53 as shown
in Fig. 3 and the inelastic fibrous component 22 extending in this groove 53, it is
easy to obtain the inelastic fiber 12 which has a fineness smaller than a fineness
of the elastic fiber 11.
[0038] Figs. 10A, 10B and 10C exemplarily illustrate the cross-sections of the conjugated
fibers 13a. The conjugated fiber 13a depicted in Fig. 10A presents a cross-section
distinguished from that of the conjugated fiber 13a depicted in Fig. 9 in that the
elastic fibrous component 21 is formed with a single groove 53. In the case of the
conjugated fiber 13a depicted in Fig. 10B, the elastic fibrous component 21 is formed
with a pair of grooves 53. Finally, in the case of the conjugated fiber 13a depicted
in Fig. 10C, the elastic fibrous component 21 is formed with four grooves 53. In this
manner, it is possible without departing from the scope of the invention to form the
elastic fibrous component 21 with a selective number of the grooves 53 in a range
of one to sixteen.
[0039] Fig. 11 is a side view of a tester 70 used in the present invention to evaluate the
nonwoven fabric with respect to its slip properties. The tester 70 comprises a plate
71 driven by an electric motor 73 so that its angle α of a gradient relative to the
horizontal plane may be increased at a predetermined rate and a block 72 to be covered
with the nonwoven fabric to be evaluated. The plate 71 has its upper surface formed
of stainless steel having a surface roughness of 12.5s as measured in accordance with
JIS B 0601. The block 72 is made of stainless steel having a weight adjusted to exert
a surface pressure of 10g/cm
2 upon the nonwoven fabric. The nonwoven fabric is attached to the block 72 so as to
cover the entire lower surface of the block 72. The plate 71 supporting the block
72 is rotated around a pivot 74 so that the angle α increases at a rate of 2°/sec
until the block 72 begins to slip over the upper surface of the plate 71. The angle
α at which the block 72 begins to slip is defined as a slip angle α
s. The smaller the value of α
s is, the higher the slip properties relative to the article wearer's skin are. Based
on the tester 70, clothing fabric for men' s and women' s shirts and pants as undergarments
made of 100 % cotton exhibit the slip angle α
s in a range of about 21° to about 25°.
[0040] TABLE 1 indicates the slip angle α
s exhibited by the examples of nonwoven fabric of the conjugated fiber 13a depicted
in Figs. 2 and 3 and control nonwoven fabrics. The nonwoven fabrics of the invention
were obtained by subjecting the web having a basis weight of 50g/m
2 to heat embossing both in the machine direction and in the cross direction. The conjugated
fiber 13a consisted of thermoplastic polyurethane and polypropylene at a weight ratio
in a range of 84.4 : 15.6 to 67.9 : 32.1 and polypropylene occupied about 70 to 90
% of the circumferential length of the conjugated fiber 13a. The comparative embodiments
of nonwoven fabric were made of thermoplastic polyurethane fiber or polypropylene
fiber and obtained by subjecting the web having a basis weight of 50 g/m
2 to heat embossing in the same manner as in the case of embodiments of the invention.
Both in the embodiments of the invention and in the comparative embodiments, a plurality
of heat embossed zones each of 0.3 mm
2 were formed at a pitch of 2 mm in the machine direction as well as in the cross direction.
As will be apparent from TABLE 1, the slip angle α
s of the nonwoven fabric 1 depends on the percentage by which polypropylene as the
inelastic fibrous component 22 occupies the circumferential length of the conjugated
fiber 13a. In other words, the invention allows the slip angle α
s of the nonwoven fabric 1 to be controlled by adjusting the proportion of the inelastic
fibrous component 22 occupying the circumferential length of the conjugated fiber
13a. When the nonwoven fabric 1 is used in a wearing article, the slip angle α
s of the upper surface 2 and/or the lower surface 3 is controlled preferably in a range
of 25° to 40°.
[0041] In order to control the slip angle α
s of the nonwoven fabric 1, it is possible without departing from the scope of the
invention to use, in addition to those indicated as the embodiments, the conjugated
fiber 13a consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane and polypropylene at a weight ratio
in a range of 20 : 80 to 90 : 10. It is also possible to use the conjugated fiber
13a in which polypropylene occupies 40 to 90% of the circumferential length of this
conjugated fiber 13a.
[TABLE 1]
| |
Constituents of conjugated fiber (wt%) |
Length occupied by polypropylene in the whole peripheral length of conjugate fiber
(%) |
Slip angle αs |
| |
Thermoplastic polyurethane |
Polypropylene |
|
|
| Example 1 |
84.4 |
15. 6 |
70. 92 |
39. 3 |
| Example 2 |
76. 5 |
23. 5 |
75. 04 |
34. 3 |
| Example 3 |
67. 9 |
32. 1 |
86. 07 |
30. 3 |
| Control 1 |
100 |
- |
0 |
49. 1 |
| Control 2 |
- |
100 |
100 |
21. 3 |
[0042] The nonwoven fabric of the present invention can be used industrially for disposable
wearable articles and the nonwoven fabric can be industrially manufactured through
the manufacturing process of the present invention.
1. An elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric comprising elastically stretchable first
fibers made of a first polymer and inelastically stretchable second fibers made of
a second polymer, said nonwoven fabric being
characterized by that:
said nonwoven fabric has first and second surfaces as viewed in its thickness direction,
said first and second surfaces extending in parallel to each other, said second fiber
is bonded to said first fiber at attaching areas formed intermittently along said
first fiber and spaced apart from said first fiber between each pair of said attaching
areas neighboring to each other, each segment of said second fiber spaced apart from
said first fiber between each pair of said attaching areas neighboring to each other
being longer than an associated segment of said first fiber, and the number of said
second fiber is in a range of 1 to 16 per each first fiber.
2. The nonwoven fabric according to Claim 1, wherein said first and second fibers intersect
with each other in such a manner that said first fiber lies inside and said second
fiber lies outside in one of said first and second surfaces.
3. The nonwoven fabric according to Claim 1 or 2, wherein said first fiber has on its
circumferential surface first curved surfaces each bulging radially outward from an
axis of said first fiber and second curved surfaces each depressed radially toward
said axis of said first fiber, said first and second curved surfaces alternately appearing
in a circumferential direction of said first fiber, and each pair of said first curved
surfaces neighboring to each other in said circumferential direction cooperate with
said second curved surface lying between said pair of said first curved surfaces neighboring
to each other to form a groove extending in a longitudinal direction of said first
fiber so that said second curved surface defines a bottom of said groove.
4. The nonwoven fabric according to any one of Claims 1 through 3, wherein one of said
first and second surfaces has a slip angle of 25° to 40°.
5. The nonwoven fabric according to any one of Claims 1 through 4, wherein said first
polymer is selected from the group consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane and thermoplastic
polyurethane containing a lubricant and said second polymer is selected from the group
consisting of polyolefin-based polymer and polyamide-based polymer.
6. A process for making an elastically stretchable nonwoven fabric formed by elastically
stretchable first fibers made of a first polymer and inelastically stretchable second
fibers made of a second polymer, said process comprising steps of:
feeding, in a machine direction, a plurality of conjugated fibers each consisting
of a first fibrous component made of said first polymer and a second fibrous component
extending in parallel to and releasably attached to a surface of said first fibrous
component and thereby forming a web from said conjugated fibers having a basis weight
in a range of 10 to 500g/m2;
forming said web with a plurality of attaching areas intermittently formed in at least
one direction of said machine direction and a cross direction intersecting orthogonally
said machine direction so that said conjugated fibers can not be separated one from
another at said attaching areas;
stretching said web at least in said one direction within an elastic range of the
first fibrous component and under a failure point of said second fibrous component
and thereby separating said first and second fibrous components one from another between
each pair of said attaching areas neighboring to each other and permanently deforming
said second fibrous component; and
allowing said web to contract under an elastic recovery force of said first fibrous
component so that said first fiber is obtained from said first fibrous component,
said second fiber is obtained from said second fibrous component and said nonwoven
fabric is obtained from said web.
7. The process according to Claim 6, wherein said first fibrous component of said conjugated
fiber has on its circumferential surface first curved surfaces each bulging radially
outward from the axis of said first fibrous component and second curved surfaces each
depressed radially toward said axis of said first fibrous component, said first and
second curved surfaces alternately appearing in a circumferential direction of said
first fibrous component, and each pair of said first curved surfaces neighboring to
each other in said circumferential direction cooperate with said second curved surface
lying between said pair of said first curved surfaces neighboring to each other to
form a groove extending in a longitudinal direction of said first fibrous component
so that said second fibrous component extends in parallel to said first fibrous component
in said groove.
8. The process according to Claim 6 or 7, wherein the circumferential length of said
conjugated fiber occupied by said second fibrous component is in a range of 40 to
90% of the whole circumferential length of said conjugated fiber.
9. The process according to any one of Claims 6 through 8, wherein the number of said
second fibrous component constituting said conjugated fiber is in a range of 1 to
16 per one of said first fibrous component.
10. The process according to any one of Claims 6 through 9, wherein said first polymer
is selected from the group consisting of thermoplastic polyurethane and thermoplastic
polyurethane containing a lubricant and said second polymer is selected from the group
consisting of polyolefin-based polymer and polyamide-based polymer.